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tv   CNN News Central  CNN  September 8, 2023 10:00am-11:00am PDT

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david: as we start a new school year, there's something new happening in california's public schools. they're called community schools. leslie: it really is shared leadership with families, students, educators, and communities. jessie: i feel like we're really valued as partners. david: it's a more innovative, holistic approach. grant: in addition to academic services, we look at serving the whole family. narrator: wellness centers, food pantries, and parental education. jessie: they're already making a difference. david: california's community schools: reimagining public education. a final full report from the fulton county special grand jury unredacted and released.
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jurors listed 39 people they thought should face charges for their efforts to overturn the 2020 election. >> that is more than double the number who were charged in the end. we will break down some of the big names among those ultimately unindicted and why this matters. plus a philadelphia police officer has turned himself in after a deadly shooting as the district attorney release its unedited body camera footage of that incident, something the victim's family wanted the public to see in its entirety. we will have the latest. and the fbi chief issuing a stark warning about russian spies in the united states. he says the number operating here is still way too big. we're following these major developing stories and many more all coming in right here to "cnn news central." ♪ today we have brand-new information about the scope of the georgia election interference investigation into
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donald trump and the key take away, the sprawling rico case against the former president and 18 others could have been much bigger. we're talking twice as many defendants. it's all in the special grand jury report that was released today, the special grand jury could not indict but could recommend indictments. the report shows the panel recommended charges for 39 people. >> among those who were named but who avoided charges were three republican senators, lindsey graham and georgia's two ousted senators kelly loeffler and david perdue, our team of reporters is covering this. also with us a special watergate prosecutors nick akerman. sara murray, first walk us through some of the bigger revelations including the folks who were named at least but not charged. >> first of all, obviously the special grand jury felt there was a broad array of wrongdoing among people who did not ultimately face charges. they said 39 people should face charges so that's huge.
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i think the biggest name alongside donald trump that they recommended was lindsey graham, sitting south carolina senator who talked to bratd raffensperger the georgia secretary of state, raffensperger felt that graham was asking him to throw away votes something graham denied. there are a number of trump advisers, michael flynn, boris epshteyn able to dodge charges but who the grand jury felt committed some wrongdoing. this gets to the difference between what you as an average person sitting on a grand jury might think is wrongdoing, violating the law versus what a prosecutor believes they can prove beyond a reasonable doubt if they take these things to court and to trial. >> on the question of lindsey graham let's take you live to capitol hill with melanie zanona. what's senator graham saying. >> reporter: we are hearing from
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senator lindsey graham. first, i want to provide some context. it boils down to this conflicting account between brad raffensperger, the georgia secretary of state and senator lindsey graham and this phone call that they had. now, raffensperger has suggested that graham was pressuring him to throw out legal mail-in ballots and it made him very uncomfortable, but graham has flat out denied that. he said he was just inquiring about the mail-in ballot system, the signature verification system, trying to figure out how it worked. he said he wasn't even talking about the 2020 presidential election, that he was talking about the pair of critical senate runoff race that is occurred in january 2021. let's take a listen to what he said moments ago in south carolina. >> i called around different states, including georgia, as a sitting united states senator, chairman of the judiciary committee. i eventually certified the election in all states including georgia. i didn't find any evidence of
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mass voter fraud, but i did have concerns about the mail-in ballot systems in georgia and other places. this is troubling for the country. we can't criminalize senators doing their job when they have a constitutional requirement to fulfill. it would be irresponsible for me in my opinion as chairman of the committee not to try to find out what happened. >> reporter: now, it's unclear why charges were recommended or what those charges were. it's also unclear why the district attorney didn't bring those charges as part of her indictment in the election subversion case, perhaps because the jurors were split in those recommendations or perhaps it was because of graham's testimony himself. he did testify before the special grand jury, though he did try to fight that in court and afterwards he said he fully cooperated and was not expecting to be charged. again, as you heard, he is denying any wrongdoing in this
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incident. >> nick, question for you as you look at this. does the fact that the da charged fewer people than the grand jury recommended indicate that she raised the bar, in effect, for indictment and could that strengthen her case at trial? >> first of all, the bar for indictment is a lot different than the bar for conviction. the bar for indictment is simply probable cause, more likely than not that someone committed a crime. for conviction you have to get 12 people to unanimously find that the person committed the crime beyond a reasonable doubt. there's a lot of reasons why they could have taken these other people and decided that the evidence just wasn't that strong. now, in the case of lindsey graham, it wasn't as though this conversation between him and brad raffensperger was on tape, like it is with donald trump. if, in fact, it had been on tape
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there may have been a different decision here, but the fact of the matter is this was a he said/he said kind of situation. they didn't seem to have any other evidence beyond that one phone call as far as we know, and i just don't think that there was the evidence. the fact that the grand jury voted, oh, i don't know, 13-7 to recommend an indictment, and that's the most people you had that were against indicting anybody, as a prosecutor i would always look at what the grand jury thought about the witnesses, about the evidence, and certainly in circumstances like this where you didn't have close to unanimous consent by the grand jury that graham had committed a crime, i'd be reluctant if that was my only evidence to go ahead and indict and go to trial and risk losing a conviction. >> cnn's kristen holmes is also with us, kristen, what is donald trump saying about all of this?
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>> shortly after this came out, this report is released he started lashing out on truth social, none of this surprising, talking about this was political, a witch hunt. i will read to you part of the post here. he wrote, the georgia grand jury report has just been released, it has zero credibility and badly paints fani willis and this political witch-hunt. they wanted to indict anyone who happened to be breathing at the time. it undermines the credibility of the findings and of course continues and ends with election interference. i will note that i talked to a number of trump advisers and they're pointing specifically to the fact that lindsey graham was on this list. for some reason and i can't quite get to the bottom of it with them, they believe that this shows that this grand jury was willing to indict anyone because he was still a sitting u.s. senator. there's something about that that they seem to think undermines the entire report. again, not clear why they believe that, but the fact that this person was still in often, even trump himself was not, many of these people are former
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advisers, former, formers, but the fact that it was a sitting u.s. senator -- >> they're pointing to that as saying that fani willis wanted to indict anyone but she didn't actually indict him. >> absolutely. that is true. >> key point of fact. >> and they're saying this is a grand jury report but they weren't indicted. unclear where that connection comes from. i was told that where he put that out. he says he wants to indict anyone who happens to be breathing, that's what's going on here. >> which has been a consistent trump argument about any of the charges against him that it's a witch-hunt. it's not outside the umbrella of claims he has made prior. nick, some of the grand jurors we can tell voted against the fake electors because they were doing -- i'm going to quote from one of the footnotes -- what they were meant to understand as
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their civic duty. again, these are some grand jurors, they did not vote with the majority on this. does such a finding help or hurt trump in that could he also argue that he thought he was doing his civic duty, or on the flip side, does it point the finger at him because the grand jurors in effect saying they were doing what the boss told them was their civic duty? how do you read that legally? >> i mean, legally i just read that to mean that's what the boss told us to do. what these people are saying is they did not have the criminal intent or knowledge of what was going on, that they were told that this was being done in case -- just in case the trump campaign won its election fight in georgia -- it's court fight, and that the election was reversed legally. that's what they're saying. and i think for some of those people that is probably a valid defense and is probably true. i mean, how many of these people
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actually knew that this was all very surreptitious and that it was going to be done using the vice president to try to get him to accept those votes over the valid votes that were certified by the state of georgia. i don't think most of these electors were that close to this to understand what actually was happening, which is why at the end of the day fani willis decided to give most of these fake electors a pass and grant them immunity to testify against the people who did know. so that's what's going on here. it's the same defense that's been made in other states with some varying degree of success. it certainly is a valid defense if someone didn't have the actual knowledge of what the whole purpose of this endeavor was. >> nick, we get a full roster of those who had indictments recommended for them and how the
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vote tallies came from the special grand jury. notably, some of those not indicted received just as many votes as those who were, and i'm thinking specifically of boris epshteyn here, he had 20 special grand jurors recommending an indictment, one voting against one and yet he was not indicted. does that have any special significance to you? >> not really. i think at the end of the day what fani willis did was to look at those recommendations and the ultimate question was can i convict those people beyond a reasonable doubt? people looking at this might have said, well, gee, it seems like they must have been guilty, they have to be guilty, they were talking to certain people or were at certain places at the right times, but at the end of the day the prosecutor is the person who has to put themselves on the line and know that they have admissible evidence to convict beyond a reasonable doubt. it very well could be that
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that's what happened here and i think it probably was. >> nick, sara, kristen, melanie, thank you all so much. we're going to stay on top of the latest details and bring them to you and responses as we get them. still to come on "cnn news central" the philadelphia da's office released body cam footage from a deadly officer-involved shooting. that officer turning himself into police. we are live with the latest on that case. plus, florida once again attempt to go change its education system. this time by trying to offer a new college entrance exam, one that would serve as an alternative to the sat and act, why this is sparking controversy. back in just moments.
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(♪) ♪ ya, can i get a drumroll, ♪ ♪ can i get a drum- ♪ ♪ that's nice ♪ cam video and it's disturbing. it reveals the final moments of the 27-year-old man you will see here, his name is eddie irizari,
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shot and killed by a philadelphia police officer back in mid-august. this morning the officer who pulled the trigger mark dial turned himself in on multiple charges which include murder. first police said that he was outside his vehicle when he was shot but you can see clearly in the video that was not the case he was sitting in the front seat of his car. today the district attorney released body cam video from the officers on the scene. one more reminder this is graphic, we were just watching t it's hard to watch. it begins as officer dial is about to exit his own video, he then approaches the suspect's. >> show me your hands. [ bleep ] shoot you. >> 413 shots fired. shots fired. 100 west fuller.
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>> like we said, it's difficult to watch. you can hear him moaning at the end. brynn gingras has watched the full footage of the officer body cams. brynn, those moments there, the police approached the vehicle, multiple shots fired through the window. very quickly it seemed. tell us what you learned by watching the full range of videos that we have at this point. >> reporter: jim, that's key there. quickly is what you just said. that's what's so striking about this body cam video. you actually don't hear the
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audio quick in because of the way the technology works. you don't hear all the same warnings we did hear not long ago when we saw that surveillance video from a restaurant of the incident that the family got out there after police gave a different account of what happened on that august day, but it's quick. as soon as those officers get out of that vehicle to respond to this traffic stop within about five seconds to our point the shots are fired. six shots fired at eddie irizarry while he was sitting in that car and allegedly according to police they believed he had a weapon or showed a weapon instead of putting his hands up. in fact, he had two knives in the car but no gun that was threatening one of those officers. again, just to back up in case viewers are just catching up, this is very different than what the initial account of what we heard from philadelphia police. in that initial account was that he was out of the car, threatening police, he wasn't taking commands and that's why
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shots were fired. you can see that's a different story from that police body camera footage. that's exactly why the irizarry family wanted the full has tent of this video to be shown to the public. that officer was suspended after police came back out and gave a mea culpa and now he was fired from the police department and is charged with murder, voluntary manslaughter, aggravated assault, reckless endangerment. he is no longer a police officer with the philadelphia police department. he has turned himself in, he did that this morning. i want you to hear from his lawyer about what his account is of all of this. >> we intend to right this wrong. this decision today puts police officers in peril at a time when they're dealing with perhaps the most violent time in our city's history. we intend to right this wrong and bring this young man home. >> reporter: now, the other officer involved in this who
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responded as well, there are no charges against him, but a life lost, jim. eddie irizarry, 27 years old. his family said he had just moved to philadelphia from puerto rico and he didn't speak much english and they believe that he didn't understand the commands that were being yelled at him when this shooting took place on philadelphia streets. >> we should be conscious that as the family releases this video and we see it that they're seeing their loved one die here. that's what's happening on camera. you say you've watched other videos where you are able to hear warnings. what warnings exactly and is the expectation they could have heard them through a closed window of that car which appeared to be closed as it happened? >> there's other -- so, again, when philadelphia police put out this statement of what happened they said irizarry was outside the vehicle. the family's attorney came across restaurant surveillance footage showing the entire scene happen and it was very clear
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when they released that to the public that irizarry was inside the vehicle and in that video you can actually hear some warnings from police saying, you know, put down the weapon. was one of the warnings. and then, you know, it's just different from what you see in the body camera footage because that audio doesn't kick in. it's important to watch out of the video because you do hear some warnings. what you pointed out, jim, is how striking in that footage is how fast they are outside the vehicle and already shooting. yes, there were warnings but five seconds, not very long. >> brynn gingras, thanks for covering. let's dip deeper with cnn's senior law enforcement analyst charles ramsey who actually ran the philadelphia police department from 2008 to 2016. thanks for sharing part of your afternoon with us. you've seen the footage. what stands out to you? >> well, there are a lot of things that stand out.
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first of all, you know, this did happen very quickly, but it's not so much the time span because these things can go down very, very quickly. it's whether or not the officer was justified in the use of deadly force. from the video that i'm looking at it does appear that this is a problematic shooting. you know, you look for three things, you look to see whether or not it's necessary, is it proportional, is it objectively reasonable. i don't see anything that would put the officer in immediate danger, which would be the justification for the use of deadly force. so obviously that jumps out. also the initial statement given by the department as to what took place is contrary to what you see in the video. he was inside the car, not outside the car. if he's only armed with a knife, obviously with windows rolled up, doors closed, that's no immediate threat. what the officer may have saw or what he thought he saw, if he thought it was a gun or something like that, i don't
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know, but obviously this is not a justified shooting in my opinion. >> so as we look at the charges that officer dial is facing, murder among several others, do you find them appropriate given the evidence that you've come across? >> not the murder. there's no premeditation that they are going to be able to prove. voluntary manslaughter to me seems reasonable. i'm not an attorney but i don't think they're going to go anywhere with an actual first-degree murder charge. the other charges, yeah, that's not something that i think would be unusual in a case like this. it's just very unfortunate all the way around. these things do happy unfortunately on occasion but, you know, this is one where the use of deadly force from what i have seen thus far does not appear to have been justified. >> chief ramsey, we also hear from dial's attorney saying that
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she is charges put other officers in danger, in great peril, his word. do you agree with that? >> no, i don't. listen, policing can be have very dangerous job, there is no question about that. i served as police commissioner in philadelphia for eight years, i had eight officers killed in the line of duty, five were shot to death so i'm very sensitive to the dangers that police officers face, but at the same time if the officer is going to use force, any kind of force n particular deadly force, it has to be appropriate, it has to be justified, it has to be necessary before you resort to that level of force. that's part of your responsibility as a police officer, period. and so i understand the dangers, but i think the comments made by that attorney of putting everyone in jeopardy as a result of this is just a lawyer trying to make something for his client, but that's just not something i can buy into.
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>> chief charles ramsey, always appreciate your perspective. thanks. >> thank you. jim? in the latest chapter of governor ron desantis' ongoing fight against the college board florida is on the verge of allowing an alternative to the s.a.t., we will show you what's in it. elon musk says that spacex's next mega rocket launch is ready to go but the faa is telling him not to fast. details just ahead on "cnn news central." wait, who do you even play for? t-mobilele! and i'm here to protect you from wireleless companies that blitz youou with phone deals that sack you with a 3-year d device contract. even i couldld get sacked? not at t-mobile! they have plans that make upgrades work foror you. they even have a plan which makes you upgrade ready every year. thanks ben! now can i do the thing? do the thing! excellent! take charge of your upgrades with our best go5g plans at t-mobile. let's have a huddle! you don't know what huddle is do you? no. [music plays] if your instinct is to help. ♪
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in the next hour the board of governors for florida's public universities is expected to approve a new college entrance exam, it's called the classic learning test or clt and it's going to serve as an alternative to the s.a.t. and a.c.t. tests. the new entrance exam ask popular among christian schools but it's been criticized by educators as being narrowly focused on religion to predict academic success in college. in approved florida would become the first state system to accept the test. cnn's carlos suarez joins us live from miami. what more can you tell us about this test and then what happens next? >> reporter: well, boris, the governing body for public -- for
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florida's public universities will meet as you noted come the top of the hour and they are expected to approve the entrance exam which is used mostly by religious affiliated colleges. it is important to note that the decision to allow the classic learning test or the clt for use in admissions does not replace the s.a.t. and a.c.t. the clt test is rooted in what the organization says is a classical education model that focuses on western tradition and texts. for example, an example test found on clt's website students are asked to read and answer questions on john paul ii's on the christian meaning of human suffering. the clt tests grammar, english and math. the clt is currently accepted by more than 250 colleges and universities in the country including 13 right here in florida. if approved florida will become the first state university
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system to accept the exam. now, the s.a.t. and the act of course are more commonly widely accepted with over 3,000 schools that allow both of these tests when it comes to the admissions pro secretary. the clt, boris, is the latest chapter in this ongoing fight between ron desantis and the college board the organization that administers the act and the advanced placement tests they blocked a placement test on african american studies saying it violated state law and lacked educational value. the college board made changes to the course amid the criticism. boris? >> carlos suarez, thank you for the reporting. the fbi director christopher wray has issued a warning about the number of russian spies in the u.s. he says the numbers are still way too big. you will hear more from director wray that's coming up.
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with tensions between the u.s. and russia at a crisis point, particularly over the war in ukraine, the head of the fbi is issuing a stark warnings about the home front. christopher wray says there are too many russian spies today operating here on u.s. soil. >> the russian intelligence footprint and by that i mean intelligence officers, is still way too big in the united states. and something that we're constantly bumping up against
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and trying to block and prevent and disrupt in every way we can. >> cnn's katie bow lis little is with us as well as kim dozier. first katie bo, i remember some officer told me there are more russian and chinese spies operating in washington than ever before. i was thinking how about the cold war. how many is wray talking about? >> it's a little hard to say from what we understand publicly exactly how many russian spies there are operating in the united states but obviously this is one of the core responsibilities for the fbi to try to identify and disrupt and kick these guys out. the reaction i not from former intelligence officials that i spoke to was that old line from casablanca i'm shocked to find out there's gambling going on here. we have seen high profile espionage cases involving russian cases in the united states. in 2018 they kicked out 60
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russian diplomats, shut down the russian consulate in seattle, earlier this year the justice department under the biden administration announced charges against another russian national who had been allegedly collecting information from u.s. citizens in the run up to and about the war, the pending russian invasion of ukraine. important -- one other important element that i think wray touched on is it's not always just traditional intelligence officers, they also use cutouts like this mexican citizen that was arrested by the united states in 2020 for allegedly assisting russian intelligence. >> kimberly, in an age of cyber warfare and cyber spying, a whole host of ways that foreign intelligence services can gather information, computer hacking, you name it. what role do human sources play and is it still as important a role as it was years ago? >> it boils down to verification and relationship building. you can steal, say, a lawmaker's emails and see that it looks
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like he's backing a certain poll sir, perhaps that he is against more aid to ukraine, but to really confirm that that's the way he's going you need to meet that person at a cocktail party and see if they will bring it up in conversation or bring it up yourself. that's the kind of thing that just like a reporter would do, you verify the information with multiple different sources. so you verify if you have tactical information you want to have human intelligence to back it up. >> okay. i wonder, katie bo, on the flip side the u.s. is certainly doing its best to recruit russian spies and the cia director said recently that dissatisfaction with putin the war in ukraine has in his words created a once in a generation opportunity for us at the cia at our core human intelligence service we're not going to let it go to waste, burns saying that we're doing our own work recruiting russian spies and we are not doing so badly. do we have a sense of whether we're balance tg out. >> exactly. certainly wray last night said
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we're doing a much better job -- we're doing a good job at making progress at kicking russian spies out of the united states. this is the world's second holdest profession so both the united states and russian are actively trying to recruit people to provide them information about their adversary and the cia yesterday put out another recruitment video in which they were sort of encouraging russian government officials to contact the cia and providing them information on though to do that securing. jim, as always, the games continue here. >> it's funny, it's interesting with those videos, that's not the first one they put out how public the efforts to be. kim, germany's top prosecutor accused a german citizen working for its own foreign intelligence service of passing secret documents to russia. the issue is you're only as safe as your weakest link. is there concern from u.s. intelligence agencies about partner agencies in europe -- not to accuse them of any
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particular weakness but they are closer to russia, are they worried about those being vulnera vulnerabilities? >> absolutely. if christopher wray is worried about high russian operatives in this country you can imagine in europe how many more operatives there would be working on this over time. that's one of the reasons that you have the five eyes organization of the u.s., britain, canada, new zealand and australia that share the really sensitive intelligence because they're worried that some of these european intelligence agencies are more porous. at the same time there's always the assumption that if you've told more than one person something is going to get out, that's the whole reason between high levels of classification and need to know information that is siloed off for certain groups of people because humans are going to talk, that's what we dpo and if you want to keep a secret secret you don't tell anyone. >> we shouldn't forget the biggest leak we know of in
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recent months was an american, right, a low-level airman who was sharing a whole host of secrets on discord. there are a number of ways for this information to get out there and that was one he didn't appear to have been recruited he just seems to have been voluntarily putting this stuff out there. >> that's one of the things you will hear from intelligence officials now. they will say used to be when we would deal with leaks we were talking about one guy sharing a documents -- >> dropping it in a park in northern virginia. >> exactly. now these leaks are huge. we are talking tara bytes of data, in the post-snowden era, that is the sort of threat, the counterintelligence threat that intelligence agencies are thinking about when they think about the insider threat. >> not just stuff you can copy on the copy machine. thank you so much. the most powerful rocket ever built is ready for its second test flight, but the federal government hasn't given the green light for spacex's sta
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we moved out of the city so our little sophie could appreciate nature. but then he got us t-mobile home internet. i was just trying to improve our signal, so some of the trees had to go. i might've taken it a step too far. (chainsaw revs) (tree crashes) (chainsaw continues) (daughter screams) let's pretend for a second that you didn't let down your entire family. what would that reality look like? well i guess i would've gotten us xfinity... and we'd have a better view. do you need mulch? what, we have a ton of mulch. nice footwork. man, you're lucky, watching live sportsl ton. never used to be this easy. now you can stream all your games like it's nothing. yes! [ cheers ] yeah! woho!
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running up and down that field looks tough. it's a pitch. get way more into what you're into when you stream on the xfinity 10g network. - [announcer] do you have an invention idea but don't know what to do next? call invent help today. they can help you get started with your idea. call now 800-710-0020. the most powerful rocket ever built is ready for its second test flight, but the federal government is saying not so fast. you might remember the spacex starship made it off the launch pad in april, but then the rocket failed to separate from the craft, forcing engineers to deploy what they called a rapid disint
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disintegration. now the faa says they are not able to launch again. i'm not sure if disintegration was the right word. >> the faa has been conducting this relatively routine mishap investigation ever since they spectacularly exploded back in april. the faa announced that it has closed the investigation but before spacex can fly again it has to implement 63 corrective actions. a lot of these actions are things that spacex likely recommended to the faa itself, but these are corrective actions they're pretty big, things like redesigning the vehicle hardware, redesigning the launch pad, an additional test of the autonomous flight safety system, that self-destruct dee fewer. we don't know how many of these things spacex has been able to correct or fix already, but the company says it's been working
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hard all summer long to make these changes, including that self-destruct feature, it's pretty important. >> a spectacular show, expensive. when you head this list does anything strike you as the faa hinting that spacex may have been negligent. >> not from best we can tell. the full report is not made public because of proprietary and national security issues. from what we can tell this is spacex being spacex. they like to make things explode, they like to test things to the point of failure because that's how they learn. the one squishy area is some of the environmental concerns, a lot of environmental groups are saying you guys likely killed l dozens and dozens of birds. that happens all the time at the kennedy space center. it's an issue of can spacex continue launching from that site. things like that. but at the moment it appears spacex was not negligent, at
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least best we can tell. >> look forward to the next launch, potentially another fireworks show. thanks so much for your reporting. to some of the other headlines we are watching this hour. zach bryant is apologizing to the oklahoma highway patrol after he was arresting last night. he was taken into custody after he refused an order to return to his car after seeing his security guard had been pulled over in a separate vehicle. he posted an apology saying emotions got the best of me and i was out of line in the things i said. i support law enforcement as much as anyone can. i was just frustrated in the moment. it was unlike me. i'm just trying the best i can. i love you guys and i'm truly sorry to the officers. also spain's national prosecutor and filed a sexual assault and coercion complaint against the soccer federation chief. lewis rubiales is accused of
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kissing jennifer hermoso on the lips after they won the cup. this paves the way for a former complaint. rubiales is suspended from his job and refuses to resign. a major upset for the reigning super bowl champions. the chiefs lost their home owner to the detroit low yons. brian branch picked off mahomes for a touchdown early in the third quarter. the chiefs regained the lead until david montgomery found the end zone for the game winning score. tough one but it was a nice pass from mahomes, a tip off from the chiefs wide receiver. >> a big win for dan campbell. pivoting to the news coming up in the next hour. a report from the special grand jury that investigated donald trump's actions after the 2020
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election. we are now reading through the details and we're learning about the people the panel thought should be charged that weren't, including a sitting u.s. isn't that right. and we're hurdling towards a potential auto strike that could cost the economy billions of dollars. the latest on the talks to avoid it when "cnn news central" returns in just a moment. white 80...! white 80...! hello patrick mahomes! hut...hut...? wait, who do you even play for? t-mobile! and i'm here t to protect you from wireless companies that blitz you with phone deals that sack you u with a 3-year device contract. even i could get sacked? not at t-mobile! they have plans that make upgrades work for you. they even have a plan which makes you upgrade ready every year. thanks ben! now can i do the thing? do the thing! excellent! take charge of your upgrades with our best go5g plans at t-mobile. let's have a huddle! you don't know what huddle is do you? no.
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she runs and plays like a puppy again. his #2s are perfect! he's a brand new dog, all in less than a year. when people switch their dog's food from kibble to the farmer's dog, they often say that it feels like magic. but there's no magic involved. (dog bark) it's simply fresh meat and vegetables, with all the nutrients dogs need— instead of dried pellets. just food made for the health of dogs. delivered in packs portioned for your dog. it's amazing what real food can do. kayaking is my thing. running is awesome. but her moderate to severe eczema would make her skin so uncomfortable.
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i've struggled with generalized myasthenia gravis. but the picture started changing when i started on vyvgart. vyvgart is for adults with generalized myasthenia gravis who are anti-achr antibody positive. in a clinical trial, vyvgart significantly improved most participants' ability to do daily activities when added to their current gmg treatment. most participants taking vyvgart also had less muscle weakness. and your vyvgart treatment schedule is designed just for you. in a clinical study, the most common side effects included urinary and respiratory tract infections, and headache. vyvgart may increase the risk of infection. tell your doctor if you have a history of infections or symptoms of an infection. vyvgart can cause allergic reactions. available as vyvgart for iv infusion and now as vyvgart hytrulo for subcutaneous injection. additional side effects for vyvgart hytrulo
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there could have been many more, a special grand jury report released hours ago reveals the fulton county district attorney fani willis could have indicted a lot more people in the georgia election case including current and former u.s. senators, ultimately she decided not to, details just ahead. it would unleash serious economic damage and it could happen in just a few days. the new details in the standoff between the big three auto makers and one of the biggest unions in the country. plus of course what it means for all of us. and they are not laughing. staff members for nbc star jimmy fallon reportedly accusing him of fostering a hostile work environment. what fallon is now saying about all of this. following these major developing stories and many more all coming in right here to "cnn news central".
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